Corporate interest in Bitcoin exploded between June 9 and 13, as public filings reveal more than 60 separate announcements tied to the cryptocurrency.
In that brief window, companies snapped up roughly 2,500 BTC and laid groundwork for billions more.
Six firms—including newly formed American Bitcoin Corp—opened treasuries for the first time, collectively locking up 404 BTC. Another ten, among them Trump Media with a planned $2.3 billion deal, outlined forthcoming purchases.
Meanwhile, 23 established holders expanded their stacks; Strategy alone bought 1,045 BTC while closing a $979.7 million IPO. Smaller additions from names like Remxpoint and Cipher Mining rounded out the tally.
Looking ahead, nine businesses have signaled fresh buying plans that could funnel an additional $1.8 billion into Bitcoin. Financing moves at GameStop, Mélioz, and France’s Blockchain Group highlight how quickly corporate treasuries are pivoting toward BTC as a reserve asset.
The surge mirrors hefty inflows into Bitcoin ETFs and underscores a broader shift: more companies now treat the cryptocurrency as a core balance-sheet component rather than a speculative side bet.
Quantum computing is no longer just a theoretical threat to Bitcoin — it’s fast becoming a real one.
A well-known crypto analyst is sounding the alarm on a potential storm brewing for Bitcoin—one that could be fueled not by speculators, but by institutions themselves.
Michael Saylor has hinted that MicroStrategy is about to top up its already-massive Bitcoin reserve, even as the Israel-Iran flare-up keeps global markets on edge.
Bitcoin is facing strong headwinds just shy of its all-time high, with analysts at Swissblock warning that a breakout may be off the table—at least for now.